Volume 1, Issue 4 (2022)
Throughout this past year, undergraduate students overcame obstacles that upended any sense of educational normalcy. Many students returned to their college campuses for the first time in a year and a half, continued to navigate the COVID-19 pandemic, and experience hybrid forms of learning inside and outside of the classroom. Despite the challenges presented to every student, undergraduates across the country and the world carried on and made the most of an atypical school year. The staff of DUJPEW has been incredibly grateful to read the wonderful submissions that we received this year and collaborate with our peers in the undergraduate community. I and the rest of the staff at DUJPEW are hopeful that the works in this issue of the journal stimulate the mind and further intellectual curiosity. Please enjoy the latest issue of the Dartmouth Undergraduate Journal of Politics, Economics and World Affairs.
Addison Dick '22, Editor-in-Chief
Editor's Notes
Letter from the Editor 2022
DUJPEW Editorial Board, Dartmouth College
Masthead 2022
DUJPEW Editorial Board, Dartmouth College
Complete Issue
Volume I | Issue IV | 2022
DUJPEW Editorial Board, Dartmouth College
Articles
The Religious Seculars: How Does Yom Kippur Impact Electoral Turnout?
Gall Sigler, Yale University
“Pure People” and “Corrupt Elites:” Corruption Talk in the 2020 Election
Milan Loewer, Columbia University
Early Childhood Intervention and Income Inequality: An Analysis on the Intergenerational Mobility of Head Start Participants
Paul Hinton, Carleton College
Bias in the Jury Box: The Sociological Determinants of Jury Selection for Capital Cases in North Carolina
Alessandra Quattrocchi, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Studying the Economic Impact of the Demonetization Across Indian Districts
Arnav Joshi, University of Pennsylvania
Conservatism, Collaboration, and Capacity: Political Explanations for Canada’s Shift in Immigrant Admissions Logic
Jaidyn Appel, Tufts University
Identifying Potential Pork-Barrel Legislation Using Machine Learning: A Preliminary Analysis
Sunil Green, Purdue University
Econometric Analysis of the Relationship Between Domestic Economic Growth and Levels of Inflow of Remittances in Developing Countries
Mihail Naskovski, Kalamazoo College